Ven y acompañanos este 25 de julio a este magno evento donde estaremos mostrando lo mejor de nuestra musica latina.Habra venta de Cds,Lps,Videos,Fotos,Posters,Instrumentos Musicales y tambien estaran muchos amigos Salseros como Humberto Corredor,Libardo Castro,Polito Vega,Mike Amadeo y muchos mas.la fiesta estara amenizada por Nando Alvericci y Dj Duban.Estaran en escena Orlando Marin Y su Orq.Diego Flores,Jose Mangual Jr,Son Boricua..te esperamos . Para mas informes visitenos en nuestra pagina:www.myspace.com/QCFNY
Jose Mangual Jr:Mil Amores
Tuesday, April 28, 2009
Salsa Y Timba en Peru
La Number one ... A’conquistar
ESTE SABADO 02 DE MAYO EN LOCAL. HONEY: AV. INDUSTRIAL 3660 CRUCE CON JR LOS ANDES COSTADO DE LA PISCINA LA LAGUNA AZUL LOS OLIVOS
Presenta su 7mo Aniversario
Con la participación de las mejores orquestas a nivel nacional :
ACONQUISTAR ORQUESTA NUMBER ONE, NOMIDA A LOS PREMIOS APDAY 2009 DEMOSTRARA PORQUE ES LA QUE MANDA EN LAS RUMBAS CON SU ESTILO INCONFUNDIBLE
BEMBE, LOS REYES DEL BARCITO DEL TIMBALERO , ESTA VEZ CON REPERTOTIO EXCLUSIVO.
N´ TALLA, VENDRÁN A PONER A GOZAR AL BAILADOR PROMOCIONANDO SU REPERTORIO 2009. ASÍMISMO PRESENTARÁN SU NUEVA VOZ CUBANA…SERÁ TREMENDA GOZADERA…
EXPLOSION HABANA, MOSTRARA A LIMA ENTERA TODO SU ESTILO INCONFUNDIBLE, CUANDO DE TIMBA SE TRATA
N´SAMBLE, DIRIGIDA POR CHARLES Y SANDRO SOLAR EX PRIMERA VOZ DE LA ORQUESTA CAMAGUEY, LA NOVEL Y SON HABANA
TRABUCOS, DESDE BARRIOS ALTOS PONDRA SU CUOTA SALSERA CON LA MEJOR SALSA DEL MOMENTO Y DEL RECUERDO .
INTERNACIONAL“MANGU” ORQUESTA, CONOCIDA POR TODOS LOS RUMBEROS LIMEÑOS POR SU ESPECTACULAR Y EXCLUSIVO REPERTORIO SALSERO QUE HACE BAILAR A LIMA ENTERA
ADEMAS : CON LA PARTICIPACION DE MANOLO ROJAS Y ARTISTAS INVITADO , PEPE VASQUEZ Y SU BLACK SHOW.
¡ SI TU NO BAILAS CON ESTO TU NO BAILAS CON NA!...
Mangu/Mayito Rivera:El Que Te Sabe Amar
Saturday, April 4, 2009
Wladimir Y Su Constelacion
Wladimir Y Su Constelacion;Es un album del bolerista venezolano Wladimir Lozano en el que comparte creditos con el cantante Willie Rodriguez.fue editado en 1979 por la disquera color en formato larga duracion de vinilo 33 1/3 r.p.m ,fue un proyecto en solitario en donde lozano siguio el ejemplo de Oscar D'leon,y formo su nueva banda tras la separacion de la Dimension Latina,aunque bien recibido por la critica,este disco fue el inicio de la inestable aunque productiva carrera de lozano quien volvio a La Dimension Latina varias ocaciones a partir de 1985 grabo con Oscar D'leon.
Lado A
1-Dos gardenias (I. Carrillo) (3:07) Canta: Wladimir
2-No existe el amor (Paul Anka, C. Costa) [Unimúsica] (4:20) Canta:
3-Arroz con coco (Lucho Bermúdez)(4:05) Canta: Wladimir y Willie
4-Cuando es amor (Carlos D'León) (4:50) Canta: Willie
Lado B
5-Chambarara (H. Hurtado) [Unimúsica] (6:12) Canta: Willie
6-Desvelo de amor (Rafael Hernández) (3:20) Canta: Wladimir
7-Y no hace na' la mujer (D.D.) (3:20) Canta: Willie
8-Campanitas de cristal (Rafael Hernández) (3:35) Canta: Wladimir
Y No Hace Na'La Mujer:
Son Venezuela:Dont Stop Now
Son Venezuela is one of the oldest and largest Latin Bands in Kansas City.
Their mix of salsa, mambo, merengue, calypso, tamboreras and cumbia fuses it's music into a sensational dance party. Their success is due to the leadership of Luis E. Guillen and the passion of all the band members.
Passion! That is what best describes SON VENEZUELA. Don't be surprised to find band members like Fernando Reynoso (Conga, Percussion) discussing the origin of Salsa/Mambo among salsa and latin Jazz enthusiasts in between breaks at a local salsa venue. The members of this band take their art very seriously. They have recorded music that has been heard throughout Kansas City, Lawrence and other areas outside Kansas City.
The multiplicity of events for local corporations and local salsa venues by Son Venezuela has helped shaped what salsa music has become in Kansas City.
Todo Tiene Su Final:
Friday, April 3, 2009
Bela Fleck And African Acoustic Masters On Tour In America
Banning Eyre and Sean Barlow recently spent three days on tour with Bela Fleck’s Africa Project in Connecticut and New York State. The lineup included Toumani Diabaté of Mali, Vusi Mahlasela of South Africa, D’Gary of Madagascar, and Anania Ngoglia of Tanzania. The shows offered an unprecedented cross-section of acoustic African music, à la Bela Fleck, culminating in one awesome jam with all the artists on stage for two songs. Afropop interviewed all the musicians, and there will be more on air and on line in the weeks to come. Here’s an initial report from Banning Eyre, with photos from The Ridgefield Playouse (Ridgefield, CT), EMPAC (Troy, NY) and The Tarrytown Music Hall (Tarrytown, NY) over the weekend of March 27-29, 2009.
The world’s most adventurous banjo player, Bela Fleck, began delving into African music in a serious way about five years ago when he recorded a few songs with the one-of-a-kind Malagasy guitarist D’Gary. D’Gary and his phenomenal percussionist/vocalist Mario stayed with Fleck in Nashville for a few days, and the songs they recorded together turned out to be the opening act of an unprecedented venture into African music. Early in 2005, Fleck traveled to Tanzania, Uganda, Gambia, and Mali to play with musicians there. He traveled with a film and recording crew, and this spring, a first CD and an excellent documentary film on DVD—both entitled Throw Down Your Heart—are on the market at last. Both are excellent, but neither can quite match the experience of seeing this unusual project play out on stage. The musical lineup for this tour is to-die-for, and the reaction of Fleck’s fans—who are natural fans for acoustic African music, even though most have yet to hear it—was gratifying to see.
I served as Fleck’s field producer in Mali, where I had the pleasure of watching the banjo maestro figure out how to jam with and accompany Oumou Sangare, Afel Bocoum, Djelimady Tounkara, Bassekou Kouyaté, and kamele ngoni ace Harouna Samake, among others. These encounters figure into the film and CD, but on stage for this tour, Fleck’s Malian foil is Toumani Diabaté. Diabaté was not in Bamako when we visited, but he and Fleck began playing together in Europe this past January and clicked instantly. In fact, before the current tour started, they performed a set of shows as a duo on the west coast. All the other principles in the concert appear on the Throw Down Your Heart CD, and the concert repertoire is largely drawn from that release.
The two-and-a-half hour concert began each night with Bela playing a banjo solo, a medley of African songs, starting with “Throw Down Your Heart,” a song he wrote en route to Africa in 2005. From there, the show unfolded in segments where Fleck would invite each collaborator to the stage in turn. Each would play first without Fleck, and then with him. The first half of the program featured Anania Ngoglia and D’Gary. The second featured Vusi Mahlasela and Toumani Diabate. And then that big jam.
Anania is surely the least known artist of the group. In fact, just about the only way any American might ever have heard him is the way Bela first did, on Afropop Worldwide’s 2004 “Visit to Dar Es Salaam” program. Anania is a blind multi-instrumentalist and singer, and a remarkable talent. For this occasion he played the Wagogo thumb piano called ilimba (plural, confusingly, marimba). This is the deep-toned lamellophone best known from recordings by Hukwe Zawose. Anania does play Wagogo traditional music with its distinctively mysterious scale, and his jam on this music with Fleck was the spiritual high point of this segment. Before that, Anania showed more playful aspects of his art. Accompanied on vocal and guitar by John Kitime, he sang a praise song to Tanzania, and then a rolling 12/8 number punctuated by vocal scatting in unison with the ilimba. When Fleck came to the stage, the two traded riffs freely, clearly enjoying each other’s musicality.
Fleck then reached for his “cello banjo,” a rich-sounding, low-register variant on his instrument. He played a medley of songs from Mali and Tanzania. The instrument’s tonality is not that far off the Malian kamele ngoni, the harp used in Wassoulou music, and so when Fleck improvised on songs by Oumou Sangare and Afel Bocoum, it worked beautifully.
Next came D’Gary, a truly fearsome musician, from a jammer’s point of view. D’Gary is a master of Madagacar’s difficult rhythms, but his art goes beyond that. He has created a rhythmic and harmonic language on the guitar all his own. He and his accompanist Mario have travelled a long, crooked musical road together, and can sense each other’s moves intuitively. Jumping into this world was clearly the greatest challenge in the show for Fleck, and the depth of the lock between them varied from night to night. Most challenging was their first song together, “Mare Rano,” a furious 12/8 with a lot of back and forth interaction before D’Gary settled into a quasi South African bass riff. Then Fleck invited bluegrass fiddler Casey Driessen to the stage to explore the “Madagascar bluegrass connection” on “Kinetsa,” one of D’Gary’s most melodious songs, and a standout on the Throw Down Your Heart CD.
The second started with Vusi Mahlasela, a true showman and effectively a one man band. Mahlasela is a delightful guitarist, but a masterful singer, who ranges from cooing to growling to soul shouts and everything in between, always with vivid expression and amazing control. He spoke powerfully about his experiences during the struggle in South Africa, and each night, spoke about the “wisdom of forgiveness,” urging the audience to “wear it like a crown.” The songs he played with Fleck draw from the swing of South African jazz and worked very naturally with the banjo. Fleck was restrained and folksy, meshing with Mahlasela’s guitar like a master sideman, and stepping out for a short, virtuosic solo on “Thula Mama.”
Toumani Diabaté is one of the most compelling instrumentalists alive, so it made sense to save him for last. The serene, water-like peels of melody and texture on his solo kora piece—the somewhat melancholy, deeply reflective “Elyne Road” from his recent CD Mande Variations—created a peaceful mood that was most welcome after all that had come before. When Fleck took the stage, they played two of his songs, one written for Toumani, and then “Throw Down Your Heart,” with Driessen’s violin adding rich, reedy texture with Diabaté’s gentle cascades of support. The presence of banjo and fiddle brought out the folksy side of the kora, and by extension, the mysterious connection between Mande music and American folk. We know the banjo descended from West African lutes, like the Mande ngoni. Obviously, nothing as elaborate as the kora survived the Atlantic passage, but something of the music’s spirit did make the journey, and echoes on in the American south. The ease with which Fleck and Diabaté conversed musically is the mark of master improvisers, but there was also a suggestion of this deeper, historical connection.
When all the musicians took the stage, the played Mahlasela’s signature song, “When You Come Back,” with all sorts of new layers and interactions added. All at once, they did not exactly sound like a band. After all, these are all soloists! But they interacted with great spirit and sensitivity, and it was a thrill just to see such a broad array of master acoustic musicians playing together on one stage. The encore was the “D’Gary Jam” from the Throw Down Your Heart CD, a freeform jam based on a simple riff, with lots of room for playful riffing and vocalizing. The back and forth between Anania’s singing and Fleck’s responses on banjo was particularly satisfying. This number brought the crowd to their feet at all three shows. These crowds—full or nearly full houses every time—were simply blown away. And rightly so. Nothing like this has ever happened before. The good news is that Fleck wants to do more African tours, likely with different collaborators. There are a few chances left to catch this tour. If you’re within striking range, it’s well worth the trip.
Wednesday, April 1, 2009
Pedro Martinez:Slave To Africa
1-Intro
2-Yoruba Soy
3-Que Tu Quieres?
4-La Bicicleta
5-Mami No Se
6-Sabroson
7-Bendicion Madre
8-Ziona
9-Dime Que Te Pasa
10-Slave To Africa
Slave To Africa:
Felix Valoy Jr:Soneando Con Un Sonero
The son of one of Cuba's most prominent soneros of all times delivers his second production as a leader. After showcasing his talents for years with the popular flutist/bandleader Maraca, Charanga Rubalcaba, and more recently with the Afro Cuban All Stars, Valoy Jr. embarked on e solo career continuing the family tradition. This recording displays Valoy Jr. as a bonafide interpreter of authentic Cuban music as well as a sonero in the true meaning of the word. An attractive repertoire of original compositions and other Cuban favorites of the past and the present bring to light the talent and essence of Valoy Jr. Through selections like the title track, plus Canto Para El, and Mi Son Tiene Lo Qua Tenía Que Tener, among others, Valoy Jr. and friends exceed over their peers at home as they interpret the Cuban son and traditional tropical dance music. Bassist Raul Guará heads the musical direction and arrangements for the recording with additional vocals supplied by William Valdez and Yoandy Valdez. Excellent solo work by pianist Emilio Aranzola and tres player Felix Martínez abounds. Featured on background vocals are Ciso Guanche, José Lussón Jr. and Gregorio Laza. (RM) Cd 2004
1-Tema De Presentacion
2-Mi Son Tiene Lo Que Tenia Que Tener
3-Manmaju
4-Soneando Con Un Sonero
5-Canto Para El
6-A Donde Nadie
7-Sonera
8-La Tortica De Pepa
9-Palo De Yaya
10-A Tu Lado Vivire
11-Besame
Soneando Con Un Sonero:
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About Me
- DJ Vico
- Jackson Heights, N.Y, United States
- Naci en Cali,Colombia,ciudad salsera por excelencia,considerada como "Capital Mundial de la Salsa". Desde niño conoci los ritmos afro-caribeños de la mano de la Sonora Matancera los cuales fueron mis inicios salseros. Muy joven salgo del pais hacia Europa y encuentro que los ritmos latinos habian llegado y comenzaban a pegar muy fuerte.España,Francia e Italia estaban alborotados por el sabor y el ritmo afro latino. En esta misma epoca tube la oportunidad de viajar a Africa y conocer mucho mas de los inicios de la salsa al escuchar los tambores Bata de las manos de los africanos. A mi regreso a Cali reafirmo mi gusto por la salsa compartiendo y aprendiendo de grandes maestros y coleccionistas caleños y asistiendo a salsotecas tradicionales como La Barola, La Ponceña, La Mulenze y por supuesto La Taberna Latina de Gary Dominguez. Sigo despues con mis viajes por las antillas:Cuba, Puerto Rico, Republica Dominicana y alli sigo absorbiendo mas ese sabor salsero que ya inundaba estas tierras. Decido radicarme en New York, donde me he encontrado a grandes figuras de la salsa que han decidido vivir aca y mostrar el sabor de la salsa desde la Capital del Mundo.